 The next one is quite exciting for those that like to play around with the DHS2 API or have found themselves needing to play around with the DHS2 API. And this one is the OpenAPI 3 specification. So for a long time, we've had an API in DHS2. It's been quite extensive. It still is quite extensive and very powerful. But sometimes it's too extensive and it's hard to really figure out what's going on, what's available, what's where. Most things are documented, but some things are a little bit harder to determine. It's difficult to inspect or to automatically kind of generate clients or those types of things for the very extensive DHS2 API. And so in version 40, we're very excited to release a specification for the entire DHS2 API in the OpenAPI 3 specification format. So you can download that API specification from your DHS2 instance in version 40 and above. You can also download subsections of that API because it is quite big and that can be problematic for some clients. So you can actually download a section of that specification. So only the specification for the user's portion of the API, for example, using a different URL. Both JSON and YAML formats are available. This is an API feature, so it's kind of behind the scenes. But you can also visualize and see what that API looks like using an OpenAPI specification browser. And there will be one linked shortly to docs.dhs2.org, and soon also will be available as a DHS2 application embedded in DHS2 itself to be able to see and explore the API within the instance that you have running. This is just an example of an OpenAPI specification browser called Spotlight, which allows you to use that specification document in JSON and to explore visually what different end points are available, what options they take, what HTTP methods that are available, and what type that would return. And this also gives you examples of how to authenticate with this API and how to use Curl to test it out and many other things. So we're excited to explore more ways to expand this API specification visualization tool to expose it in docs.dhs2.org as well as in DHS2 instances themselves.